BIO/00/32
Bruxelles, le 18 Février 2000
NOTE
BIO AUX BUREAUX NATIONAUX
cc. aux Membres du Service PRESSE et COMMUNICATION
Cyanide Pollution Statement by Commissioner Wallström
Pia Ahrenkilde Hansen
Returning from her fact
finding mission on cyanide pollution in Romania and Hungary, European
Commissioner Margot Wallström declared:
"We have decided to
create an international task force immediately to provide an independant
assessment of this major environmental accident. The authorities and the local
communities affected need all the help we can provide, together with local and
international organisations, in analysing this accident, as well as the damages
and the needs for assistance.
She added:
There are many lessons to be
learned to prevent this sort of accident from happening again in Europe in the
future. The Baia Mare accident, like the previous similar accident in Doñana
and the recent ERIKA disaster in France, has demonstrated that we need to
further tighten European legislation. We must ensure that polluters can
effectively be held responsible for damages. We will also need to strengthen
our civil protection capabilities."
Mrs. Wallström met with the
Hungarian Foreign Minister, the Hungarian and Romanian Environment Ministers,
local authorities, NGOs and citizens, as well as a representative from the
company Aurul SA, from which the cyanide spill originated. She visited polluted
sites in both countries.
She announced that the
following seven steps will be taken:
· Creation of an
international task force chaired by the European Commission
· Immediate
technical assistance to Hungarian and Romanian authorities
· Evaluation of
needs for financial assistance based on assessments of the damage and
formulation of restoration projects
· Reinforcement of
the EU's civil protection capabilities
· Extension of the
ongoing Commission study on environmental hotspots in the mining industry to
include the candidate countries
· Review and
adaptation of existing EU legislation
· Acceleration of
preparations of legislation on environmental liability
The task force will carry
out an independent assessment of the accident, its impact and further
assistance needs. It will have wide participation from organisations, which are
active in the region.
Civil society will be
invited to participate in the work, and the general public will be fully
informed about the task force's
findings.
Technical experts will go to
Hungary and Romania to assist local experts in information and preventive
action already undertaken by the authorities of the two countries.
The Commission intends to
make funds available for assessment of the damages. Also, funding under the
PHARE programme, and possibly other existing programmes or funds, will be
envisaged.
The Commission will
immediately start exploring how already existing Civil Protection networks and
resources could be reinforced, to be better prepared to react to environmental
accidents and disasters in the future.
The study on the mining
industry will be completed by the end of this year.
Existing legislation,
notably on industrial accidents, should be reviewed to cover risks relating to
the mining industry.
Following adoption of the
White Paper on enviromental liability on 9 February, preparation of a proposal
for a Framework Directive should be speeded up to secure rapid introduction of
a strict liabilty regime for environmental damage, based on the polluter pays
principle.
Regards,
Jonathan Faull